Test prop cutting results

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Day 1 – Clomixyl 150mg – in three divided doses.
Day 2 – Clomixyl 100mg – in two divided doses
Following 10 days – Clomixyl 50mg – before bed
Following 10 days – Clomixyl 50mg – before bed
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Proposition 13 sets the assessed value of properties at the time of purchase (known as an acquisition value system), with a possible 2% annual assessment increase. As a result, properties of equal value can have a great amount of variation in their assessed value, even if they are next to each other. [4] The disparity grows when property prices appreciate by more than 2% a year. The Case-Shiller housing index shows prices in Los Angeles , San Diego , and San Francisco appreciated 170% from 1987 (the start of available data) to 2012 while the 2% cap only allowed a 67% increase in taxes on homes that were not sold during this 26-year period. [40]

"Gen. Kernan's nuanced defense was that the simulation had necessarily
been conducted in the vicinity of busy sea lanes, hence, in the presence of
live commercial shipping; and this required the Navy to 'turn off' some of its
defenses, which it would not have done in a real wartime situation. All of which
is probably true, but the general's remark that in a real Gulf war the fleet
would be deployed differently, in a stand-off manner, with its over-the-horizon
defenses fully operable, was a misrepresentation of the actual situation in
the Persian Gulf, today. The US Navy's biggest problem operating in Gulf waters
are the constraints that the region's confined spaces impose on US naval defenses,
which were designed for the open sea. The Persian Gulf is nothing but a large
lake, after all, and in such an environment the Navy's over-the-horizon defenses
are seriously compromised. Nor can the Navy withdraw to a safe distance, so
long as its close-in presence is required to support the US occupation forces
in Iraq. The serious implications of this simple fact for a possible future
conflict, for instance, involving Iran, have never, to my knowledge, been discussed
in the US press." (Ibid.)

Test prop cutting results

"Gen. Kernan's nuanced defense was that the simulation had necessarily
been conducted in the vicinity of busy sea lanes, hence, in the presence of
live commercial shipping; and this required the Navy to 'turn off' some of its
defenses, which it would not have done in a real wartime situation. All of which
is probably true, but the general's remark that in a real Gulf war the fleet
would be deployed differently, in a stand-off manner, with its over-the-horizon
defenses fully operable, was a misrepresentation of the actual situation in
the Persian Gulf, today. The US Navy's biggest problem operating in Gulf waters
are the constraints that the region's confined spaces impose on US naval defenses,
which were designed for the open sea. The Persian Gulf is nothing but a large
lake, after all, and in such an environment the Navy's over-the-horizon defenses
are seriously compromised. Nor can the Navy withdraw to a safe distance, so
long as its close-in presence is required to support the US occupation forces
in Iraq. The serious implications of this simple fact for a possible future
conflict, for instance, involving Iran, have never, to my knowledge, been discussed
in the US press." (Ibid.)